The Inn at Eagle Point
Page 38
He left the bank, walked over to his place and took a look at the Harley he’d owned ever since high school. He shook his head. It wasn’t exactly a family vehicle. Pulling out his cell phone, he called his sister. “I need a ride. Can you pick me up at my place?”
Still grateful to him for interceding with their father, Laila didn’t waste time on questions. “Give me five minutes.”
Once he’d told her where they were going, she kept shooting speculative glances his way. Finally she lost patience. “Are you going to tell me or not?”
“Not,” he said at once, chuckling at the look of annoyance on her face.
She turned into the car dealership, parked, then followed him as he walked straight over to a minivan. “What do you think?” he asked.
Sudden understanding dawned on her face. “You’re going to ask Abby to marry you, aren’t you? You’re buying a family car.”
“Did I say that?”
She elbowed him in the ribs. “You didn’t have to. There’s nothing else on earth that could persuade you to give up your Harley.”
“Okay, you got me. Now tell me what you think of this one?” He pointed inside, staring in amazement. “It even has a DVD player for the backseat. Can you imagine that?”
She gave him a wry look. “Cars have a lot of accessories these days that don’t come with a bike. It’s about time you grew up and discovered them.”
He frowned at her taunt. “It has nothing to do with growing up, Laila. I just never had to think about owning a car in the city.”
She tucked her arm through his. “Fair enough. Are you sure you want to buy the first one you’ve looked at?”
He shrugged. “It’s a car. It functions. It looks safe enough for the kids.”
Laila rolled her eyes. “You are hopeless. Okay, if this is the one you want, let’s go inside and you can sign the papers. I have to tell you, though, it’s going to kill some poor sales guy that he can’t use all his bargaining skills on you.”
When they were halfway across the showroom floor, a salesman started heading their way. Laila jerked him to a stop. “Do not pay sticker price,” she warned him. “It’s a rip-off. Let me handle this.”
Trace regarded her with amusement. “Be my guest.”
To his amazement, she managed to bring the price down significantly and an hour later, Trace was crossing the lot with the keys in his hand.
“You going to see Abby now?” she asked.
He nodded. In fact, he had the ring tucked in his pocket, though something told him she might be more impressed with the car.
Rather than going straight to the inn, Trace parked the new car in the driveway at the house he’d bought, then walked down the road to the inn. He found Abby in the office, juggling several phone calls. She barely glanced up at his arrival.
When she finally hung up on the last call, she gave him a weary smile. Trace stood up and held out his hand.
“You need a break. Come for a walk with me.”
To his surprise, she stood up immediately, took his hand and followed him through the French doors and across the lawn toward the beach.
“I can’t be gone long,” she said as they walked along the sand. “The phones have been ringing off the hook today with locals wanting to make reservations for out-of-town guests.”
“Jess’s inn. Jess’s problem,” he told her as he led the way along the beach for the half mile it took to reach his new house. She seemed oblivious to where he was taking her.
A frown knit her brow. “But I’m just—”
“Trying to help. I know. So does she, but that doesn’t mean it’s not grating. The inn’s taking off. Bring in the bookkeeper and let Jess run the place from here on out.”
“Do you really think she can do it on her own?”
He met her worried gaze. “Do you?”
She hesitated for a heartbeat, then nodded. “I really think she’s ready.”
“Good. Then my mission is accomplished and you and I can move on to other things, like what’s next for the two of us.”
She studied him with a narrowed gaze. “You’re basically admitting you deliberately kept me here for your own nefarious reasons?”
“Nefarious?” he protested, not liking the way it sounded. “I wanted another chance with you.”
“You wanted revenge,” she corrected, then grinned slowly and wound her arms around his neck. “Funny how things can backfire, isn’t it?”
He lowered his lips to hers. “Indeed it is, but you’ll never hear me complaining.”
He broke off the kiss. “Come with me.”
She glanced around and seemed to realize where they were. “The house you bought.”
He met her gaze. “Our house, I hope.”
He led the way up the steps to the yard, then around the house, where the car was sitting in the driveway. “Our car.”
Her mouth dropped open. “You bought a minivan?”
“I can hardly ride the girls around on the back of the Harley.” He winked. “I still hope to get you on there from time to time, though. The car’s just to prove how responsible a stepfather I’ll be.”
A soft smile played on her lips. “Never a doubt about that,” she told him.
He took a deep breath, then launched into the speech he’d rehearsed. “Look, I know you’re not sure you want to stay here and if you don’t, that’ll work, but this house is right for us. Your dad built it, so it seems to me an O’Brien ought to live in it. If we only use it for vacations or on weekends, that’s okay. All I care about is the two of us being together.”
“Me, too,” she said. “Before you get too carried away with all the sacrifices you’re prepared to make to win me over, you should know that I took a new job today.”
Trace stared at her blankly. “A new job?”
“Running the Baltimore office. The traffic back and forth, by the way, is a total pain, so we might want to consider an apartment nearby, but this is home, Trace. This house, right here, with you. I think it’s just been waiting for us to come home.”
Trace couldn’t stop the grin that was spreading across his face. “You didn’t even wait to see the ring or hear the proposal. I was planning to wow you. I intended to tell you that I’ve been in love with you for longer than I can remember. I want to marry you and be a dad to your girls, and maybe even have a couple of kids of our own. And just in case you’re worried about it, Carrie and Caitlyn approve. I’ve already asked their permission, though I’m not entirely sure they knew what was at stake. Your grandmother and Mick have given this a thumbs-up, as well. I haven’t gotten to your brothers yet and given the way we used to get along, that may be just as well, but I’ll win them over, because I know that’s important to you.”
There were tears in her eyes when he finished, happy tears, he hoped.
“Okay, now you’ve wowed me,” she whispered. “The answer’s yes.”
“And the ring? Do you want to see it?”
“Oh, I want it,” she said. “But only because it’s a sign that we belong to each other.”
Still not quite able to believe it had all come together the way he’d dreamed it would so many years ago, he slid the diamond solitaire onto her finger.
“Have you thought about when you want to get married?” he asked, drawing her down beside him on the steps of what would be their first and only home together.
“So
on.”
“And where?”
“At the inn, of course. Nefarious designs by a stuffy old banker aside, it brought us back together. Besides, I wouldn’t want to risk Jess’s wrath by having it anywhere else.”
Trace laughed. “I love you, Abby O’Brien Winters.”
“And I love you, Trace Riley. I think I’m beginning to see what Mick saw when he planned this town. It’s the perfect place to fall in love and raise a family. I think there might be something in the air.”
Trace took a deep breath, but the only aroma he could detect was lilacs. Funny thing, too, since they’d been out of season for months. Maybe there really was a bit of magic in the air.
ISBN: 978-1-4268-3080-8
THE INN AT EAGLE POINT
Copyright © 2009 by Sherryl Woods.
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